Cebu roster courtesy of Pamela Brink:
"Basically the letter was to be sent to relatives to let them know
their relatives were alive. The letter from Lucy W. Brown was sent to
my aunt for her to forward. It is a good list and as far as I know the
only list of the Cebu internees in 1942."

Capalonga soldiers
(RG 407 Box 123) - Report about six American soldiers who were cared
for and protected in Capalonga, Camarines Norte. Sept 22, 1945.Statistics regarding the men on Bataan and Corregidor (by Robert Hudson):

In the last two weeks before surrender, there were 150 non-battle-related deaths per day due to disease and malnutrition.

During the Bataan Death March, 5,000 ~ 10,000 Filipino's died and 500 ~ 600 Americans.

At
Camp O'Donnell, from which Corregidor men were spared, in six weeks,
2,534 Americans and as many as 22,000 Filipinos died. These deaths can
be attributed largely to the condition these men were in after
surviving the march.

When the Bataan men were moved to
Cabanatuan, the Corregidor men were there watching them come in and
were aghast at the horrible condition they were in. In the first month
at Cabanatuan, 1,300 Bataan men died as opposed to 37 Corregidor men.

Between 1942 and 1944, there were 2,636 total POW deaths at Cabanatuan -- 2,399 men from Bataan and 237 from Corregidor.

After
a few weeks in Cabanatuan, all POW's were in the same poor condition.
It stands to reason, then, that the majority of POW's who died on hell
ships were from Corregidor because within six months after the
surrender, half of the Bataan men were dead.

Bataan MissingDedicated to
the thousands of American servicemen who were imprisoned and died of
starvation, disease and mistreatment on the Bataan Death March and in
Japanese prison camps in the Philippines